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Committee on Teaching about the UN. Thomas Pogge Leitner Professor of Philosophy and International Affairs, Yale University. Poverty, Inequality and Social Justice. 1. Life Expectancy at Birth. Life Expectancy at Birth. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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1
Committee on Teaching about the UN
Thomas PoggeLeitner Professor of Philosophy and International
Affairs, Yale University
Poverty, Inequality and Social
Justice
Life Expectancy at Birth
3
Life Expectancy at Birth
widely diverging, with Japan now at the top (about 83 years), the USA at about 50th place (about 78 years), and a few African countries — Swaziland, Angola, Mozambique, Zambia, Sierra Leone — at the bottom (about 40 years or even less).
Per Capita Income (Yr 2000 US$)
YEAR 0 1000 1500 1820 1995World $425 $420 $545 $675 $5,188
The West $439 $406 $624 $1,149 $19,990West Europe 450 400 670 1,269 17,456
N.America 400 400 400 1,233 22,933Japan 400 425 525 675 19,720
The Rest $423 $424 $532 $594 $2,971Other
Europe 400 400 597 803 5,147Latin
America 400 415 415 671 5,031China 450 450 600 600 2,653
Other Asia 425 425 525 560 2,768Africa 400 400 400 400 1,221
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The Human Right Least Realized
“Everyone has the right to a standard of living adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family, including food, clothing, housing and medical care and necessary social services….”
Article 25(1), Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 1948
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World Poverty TodayAmong 7+ billion human beings, about 868 million are chronically undernourished (FAO 2012), 2000 million lack access to essential medicines (www.fic.nih.gov/about/plan/exec_summary.htm), 783 million lack safe drinking water (MDG Report 2012, p. 52), 1600 million lack adequate shelter (UN Special Rapporteur 2005), 1600 million lack electricity (UN Habitat, “Urban Energy”), 2500 million lack adequate sanitation (MDG Report 2012, p. 5), 796 million adults are illiterate (www.uis.unesco.org), 218 million children (aged 5 to 17) do wage work outside their household — often under slavery-like and hazardous conditions: as soldiers, prostitutes or domestic servants, or in agriculture, construction, textile or carpet production. ILO: The End of Child Labour, Within Reach, 2006, pp. 9, 11, 17-18.
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Quintiles as defined by
Snapshot ViewLife-expectancy
Group Size as Defined by
Whole-Person View
Poorest 20% 36 years 34%Second-
poorest 20% 60 years 20%
Middle 20% 72 years 17%Second-richest
20% 80 years 15%
Richest 20% 84 years 14%Over a third of all lives lived in the poorest
fifth of humanity?
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At Least a Third of Human Deaths
— some 18 (out of 57) million per year or 50,000 daily — are due to poverty-related causes, in thousands:
diarrhea (2163) and malnutrition (487),perinatal (3180) and maternal conditions (527),
childhood diseases (847 — half measles),tuberculosis (1464), meningitis (340), hepatitis (159),
malaria (889) and other tropical diseases (152),respiratory infections (4259 — mainly pneumonia),
HIV/AIDS (2040), sexually transmitted diseases (128). WHO: World Health Organization, Global Burden of Disease: 2004
Update, Geneva 2008, Table A1, pp. 54-59.
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Millions of Deaths
Korea and Vietnam 1951-54, 1965-74
Congo Free State 1886-1908
Russian Civil War 1917-22
World War One 1914-18
Stalin's Repression 1924-53
Mao's Great Leap Forward 1959-62
World War Two 1939-45
Worldwide Poverty Deaths 1990-2012
0 50 100 150 200 250 300 350 4005.5
7.5
9
17
20
30
60
400
Wealth
S
Global Household Income Distribution 1988
Richest Ventile: 42.87%
Next Twenty Percent 46.63%
Second Quarter 6.97%
Top Five Percent 42.87%
2.37%
1.16%
Data Branko Milanovic, World Bank
S
Global Household Income Distribution 2005
Richest Ventile: 42.87%
Next Twenty Percent 43.98%
Top Five Percent 46.36%
2.14%
0.78%Second Quarter 6.74% Data Branko Milanovic, World Bank
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Key Facts
In just 17 years, the richest five percent of human beings have gained more (3.49%) than the poorer half had left at the end of this period (2.92%).
The ratio of average incomes of the richest five percent and the poorest quarter rose from 185:1 to 297:1 in this 1988-2005 period.
Had the poorer half held steady, its 2005 share of global household income would have been 21% higher (3.53% instead of 2.92%). Had the poorest quarter held steady, its 2005 share of global household income would have been 49% higher (1.16% instead of 0.78%).
Had it been allowed to gain the 3.49% of global household income that was in fact gained by the richest five percent, the poorer half would have doubled its share to 7.02% in 2005 — sufficient to end severe poverty.
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Inequality Spirals
Regulatory capture makes competitive systems vulnerable to inequality spirals:
The strongest participants have the greatest opportunities and incentives to achieve the expertise and coordination needed for effective lobbying.
They use these opportunities to expand their relative position; then use their increased influence to shift the rules or their application even more in their own favor.
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Supranational Rule Shaping
offers especially high returns from lobbying because such rules emerge in a bargaining environment where
there is no democratic counterweight or revolutionary danger zone,
there is little transparency even ex post,
and moral restraints are easily dispelled by doubts about their international acceptance.
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The Most Cost-Effective Lobbying
seeks to shape the design of supranational/global institutional arrangements (WTO, G20, EU…)while also aiming to shift governance upward from the national to the supranational/global level;is done by the very wealthiest banks, corporations, industry associations and individualsby way of influencing government officials of major powers, esp. the US (softest target).
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Counter-Argument
Poverty is evolving differently in the various developing countries and regions.
This shows that local (e.g., municipal, provincial, national) factors account for the persistence of severe poverty where it persist.
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Conceptual Answer to the Counter-Argument
It merely shows that local factors are co-responsible for the persistence of severe poverty. It does not show that local factors are solely responsible.
Example: Differential learning success of students/pupils in the same class.
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Rising Inequality in the US (1978-2007)
The income share of the poorest half of the population droppedby more than half from 26.4% to 12.8%. That of the top 1 percentrose 2.6-fold from 8.95% to 23.50%; that of the top 1/10 percentrose 4.6-fold from 2.65% to 12.28%; that of the top 1/100 percentrose 7-fold from 0.86% to 6.04% (Saez Table A3).
The top hundredth percent (14,400 tax returns, ca. 30,000 people) have nearly half as much income as the bottom half (ca. 150 million) of Americans — and more income than the bottom 40% (2800 million) of humanity.
finance.yahoo.com/banking-budgeting/article/107575/rise-of-the-super-rich-hits-a-sobering-wall.html
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Supranational Institutional Architecture
National Institutional
Schemes of the Various Less Developed Countries
Poor and Vulnerable
Citizens in the Less Developed
Countries
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Supranational Institutional Architecture
National Institutional
Schemes of the Various Less Developed Countries
Poor and Vulnerable
Citizens in the Less Developed
Countries
Protectionism
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Supranational Institutional Architecture
National Institutional
Schemes of the Various Less Developed Countries
Poor and Vulnerable
Citizens in the Less Developed
Countries
Protectionism Pollution Rules
29
Supranational Institutional Architecture
National Institutional
Schemes of the Various Less Developed Countries
Poor and Vulnerable
Citizens in the Less Developed
Countries
Protectionism Pollution Rules Pharmaceuticals
30
Supranational Institutional Architecture
National Institutional
Schemes of the Various Less Developed Countries
Poor and Vulnerable
Citizens in the Less Developed
Countries
Protectionism Pollution Rules Pharmaceuticals Illicit Financial Flows
31
Supranational Institutional Architecture
National Institutional
Schemes of the Various Less Developed Countries
Poor and Vulnerable
Citizens in the Less Developed
Countries
Labor StandardsProtectionism Pollution Rules Pharmaceuticals Illicit Financial Flows
Nat’l Violence, Oppression, Exploitation, Corruption
32
Supranational Institutional Architecture
National Institutional
Schemes of the Various Less Developed Countries
Poor and Vulnerable
Citizens in the Less Developed
Countries
Labor Standards Four Privileges
Protectionism Pollution Rules Pharmaceuticals Illicit Financial Flows
Nat’l Violence, Oppression, Exploitation, Corruption
33
Supranational Institutional Architecture
National Institutional
Schemes of the Various Less Developed Countries
Poor and Vulnerable
Citizens in the Less Developed
Countries
Labor Standards Four Privileges Arms Trade
Protectionism Pollution Rules Pharmaceuticals Illicit Financial Flows
Nat’l Violence, Oppression, Exploitation, Corruption
34
Supranational Institutional Architecture
Governments of the More
Powerful Countries
National Institutional
Schemes of the Various Less Developed Countries
Poor and Vulnerable
Citizens in the Less Developed
Countries
Labor Standards Four Privileges Arms Trade
Protectionism Pollution Rules Pharmaceuticals Illicit Financial Flows
Nat’l Violence, Oppression, Exploitation, Corruption
35
Supranational Institutional Architecture
Governments of the More
Powerful Countries
National Institutional
Schemes of the Various Less Developed Countries
Corporations and Citizens of
the More Powerful
Countries
Poor and Vulnerable
Citizens in the Less Developed
Countries
Labor Standards Four Privileges Arms Trade
Protectionism Pollution Rules Pharmaceuticals Illicit Financial Flows
Nat’l Violence, Oppression, Exploitation, Corruption
36
Human Rights as Moral Claims on (Global)
Institutional Arrangements
“Everyone is entitled to a social and international order in which the rights and freedoms set forth in this Declaration can be fully realized.”
Article 28, Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 1948
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Reform Prospects
My generation has failed at protecting the poor – domestically and esp. internationally.
As a result, run-away inequality has become entrenched, reform much harder to achieve.
Attaining real participation by the poor is still possible through sustained moral mobilization sharply focused on intelligent political action that includes allies who may not be morally motivated.
The Core Challenge for Reform
Increasing importance of supranational institutional arrangements (WTO, G20, EU…);
democratic deficit, associated with enhanced opportunities for regulatory capture;
inequality spiral and inefficiency/instability of supranational institutional architecture (GFC).
39
The Millennium Development “Goals”
Move froma detached wish list
tospecific responsibilities
of named competent actors
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Post-2015 Institutional Reform Goals
Tax on trade-distorting subventions for poverty eradicationTax on greenhouse gas emissions for poverty eradicationTax on arms exports to LDCs for poverty eradicationAlternative Minimum Tax on MNC profits for poverty eradicationEnd accounts with unknown owners or beneficiariesOnly minimally representative rulers to undertake debt burdensTax on natural resource purchases from unrepresentative rulersOption to have new medicines rewarded according to health impact